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The mainstream media informed us this week that Lee Malvo, the
reportedly "17-year-old" youth charged as a material witness in the
sniper investigation along with John Mohammed, is a
"Jamaican national." As of this writing (Oct. 24), the Immigration and
Naturalization Service refused to comment publicly on the exact nature
of Malvo's immigration status.

Here are the facts the INS doesn't want you to know: Lee Malvo is an
illegal alien from Jamaica who jumped ship in Miami in June 2001. He was
apprehended by the Border Patrol in Bellingham, Wash., in December 2001,
but was then let go by the INS district in Seattle in clear violation of
federal law and contrary to what the arresting Border Patrol officers
intended, according to my law enforcement sources.

According to INS records I obtained, Malvo was arrested by Border Patrol
agents in Bellingham, Wash., on December 19, 2001. Local police called
the Border Patrol during an incident involving "some sort of custody
dispute" between Malvo's mother, Uma Sceon James, and John
Mohammed (the ex-Army soldier with black radical Muslim ties now at the
center of the sniper investigation). James admitted that six months
earlier, "she and her son were passengers on a cargo ship that was
filled with 'illegal asians (sic).' They were all off loaded in the
Miami, FL area where she immediately located work at the Red Lobster in
Ft. Myers, FL."

From there, Malvo and James traveled to Tacoma, Wash., and ended up in
Bellingham. At the time of their arrest, INS records indicate, neither
Malvo nor his mother had any documents proving their identities or
allowing them "to be or remain in the United States legally." The Border
Patrol agents concluded that because she had "no roots or close family
ties in the United States, James was likely to abscond." The arresting
officer noted that the mother-and-son illegal aliens, Malvo and James,
would be "detained at the Seattle Detention facility in Seattle,
Washington pending deportation charges."

That's not what happened. About a month after their arrest, Malvo and
his mother were set free by the Seattle district INS-contrary to what
the arresting Border Patrol officers had determined should be done. And
in clear violation of federal law regarding the removal of illegal alien
stowaways. According to the Detention and Deportation Officers' Field
Manual:

"Occasionally, you may encounter an alien who claims to be a stowaway,
but cannot or will not provide information concerning the name of the
vessel of arrival. Prior to April 1, 1997, such aliens could be handled
in the same way as any other EWI [entered without inspection] case and
placed into removal proceedings. The [Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act], however, directs that stowaways,
regardless of when encountered, are to be removed without a
hearing.citing section 235(a)(2) of the Act as the authority for the
action."

The law is explicit: Illegal alien stowaways are to be detained and
deported without hearings. James admitted that she and her son were
illegal alien stowaways. Yet, in January 2002, James was released on a
$1,500 bond; Malvo was set loose without any bond on his own
recognizance. Here is my theory: Somebody at the Seattle INS office
leaned on the arresting Border Patrol officers to disregard Malvo and
his mother's "stowaway" status-allowing them to run free and allowing
the INS to avoid the costs associated with detention and deportation.
So, who let Lee Malvo loose? The Seattle INS office referred my call to
the Washington, D.C. headquarters. The national headquarters referred
calls to the Montgomery County sniper task force. Standard INS operating
procedure: Pass the buck and run for cover.

"This makes me sick to my stomach," says Daryl Schermerhorn, vice
president of the Northwest regional chapter of the National Border
Patrol Council, which represents Border Patrol agents in Washington
State. "The INS is not concerned with enforcing immigration law," he
told me this week. "It's more concerned with freeing up jails and saving
a few bucks than it is with protecting Americans and removing people who
don't belong here."

As I document in my book, Invasion, these countless "catch and release"
cases have demoralized rank-and-file INS agents and cost scores of
American lives-from cops gunned down by fugitive deportees to victims of
illegal border-crossing murderers, and now, quite possibly, to the
innocents slaughtered in the Washington, D.C., area sniping spree.
Eugene Davis, a retired deputy chief Border Patrol agent in Blaine,
Wash., told me: "This is another classic example of how our catch and
release policy for illegal aliens remains a danger to us all. What's it
going to take for the American people to demand that we fix the system?"